Newspapers / The Perquimans Weekly (Hertford, … / March 14, 1941, edition 1 / Page 7
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1 -' - THE PERQUIMANS WEEKLY, HERTFORD, N. a, FRIDAY, MARCH 14, 1941 FACE SEVEN SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON THE LORD'S SUPPER ternational Sunday School for March 16, J941 Golden Text: "As 'often as ye eat tide bread, end drink the cup, ye proclaim the Lord's death till he come." Cor. 11:26. Lesson Text: Luke 22:14-30 Cur last lesson closed with a day of controversy. The enemies of Jeeas sought to trap him several times' by pronouncing perplexing questions, each of which he answereu in such a way as to avoid the pitfalls intended for him. He spent his last active days teaching. Jesus also took opportunity u ouia xaiseiy ciaim me allegiance ikh was due himself. He realized it was a matter of a few hours before his departure and wanted to fortify his followers as far as possi e for the trials and persecution 'which would beset them. He warned them of many disastrous calamities, of families divided and hatred en- ' gendered, but reassured them thai not one of their heirs would perish, therefore, "in your patience possess , ye your souls." He admonished them to watch and pray, not allowing their hearts be overcharged with pleas ure and other interests to the exclu sion of his own kingdom. The Passover was the largest ol thf, Jewish festivals commemorating the great deliverance from the tenth plague, which had been successful in bringing the Jews out of Egypt While the religious leaders were de Sirous of killing Jesus they feared the wrath of the multitude which had , gathered in Jerusalem for this event. These leaders may have been con vinced that they were performing a religious service but their thinking was warped by a very selfish determ ination to preserve their own privi leges. Judas offered to betray his Master, either for the money, as is generally accepted, or in the hope that a crisis would force Jesus to ex- ert his own power. "The Paschal Feast was a family feast, at which the head of the fan. ily presided," says G. Campbell Mor gan. "Here, then, was something ffapnge, something digerent; a group tf men all away from their own homes. They were guests in the house of another man, and that man was not presiding; he had lent the hom. Yet this was a family gath ering, but it was a new family! Jesus was the Head. He took charge. He presided, as the father of the household always presided at the Paschal Feast. Here was a new kinship. Away back in his ministry he had said one day, 'Who is my mother, who are my brethren and ray sisters T They that do the will of my God.' Here they were, that , little group with him, the new family." , Jesus arranged to nr.ake his last evening with his disciples an occa aion which they would always re member and instituted a model com memorative service. Upon these few men would rest the weight of hu i kingdom and the ultimate success ol the mission of Jesus would be detet "mined by the faith and power ol Jabbage Plants UK SALE See JOHN 0. WHITE Hertford, N. C. TAYLOR THEATRE EDENTON, N. C ' Wg HAVE THE SHOWS Friday, March 14 ' Mickey Rooney, Lewis Stone, Fay Holden, Kathryn Grayson, Aim Rutherford, Sara'Haden and , - ' Ian Hunter in "ANDY HARDY'S PRIVATE 3 SECRETARY" '' Matinee 10c and 25c Night iOe and 85c This Picture Saturday, March 15 ' Roy Rogers and Gabby Hayes fat ftOBINHOOD OF THE PECOS1 Sunday, March 16-4-Double Feature Jane Wither and Buddy Rogers in "GOLDEN HOOFS" -t,r ' Bob Steele In " '. w THE GREAT TRAIN ROBBER V Monday and Tuesday; March 17-18 . Margaret Sullavan and Predric March in "SO ENDS OUR NIGHT" Wednesday, March 19 , Jfr . Double feature 10c and' 2QV "TOO MANiY GIRLS" (. Tim Holt fet ' ? "THE FAUGO KID" 7 these, intimate followers in the days which were to come. With the re sponsibility to be assumed Jesua made his last supper with them a source of unending spiritual inspira tion, not only to them but to all per sons, who have through the succeed ing centuries adopted his teachings and professed to follow him. The gathered in the upper room of a Jerusalem home, which was to be come the scene of many historic events in the early church. The memorial ceremony was, very simple and effective. As h4 passed the bread to them he made it the symbol for his own body which would soon be broken on the cross. As they drank from the cup then and al ways afterwards the drink becanu symbolical of his blood which was shed, for their own short-comings. While a large body of believers ac cept the theory that these symboio became real, the fact that Jesus used them in a representative way is apart from the fact that- he was alive wheii the first supper was observed. So, today, in many lands and to count less thousands the communion is a memorial of the love and suffering of Jesus. "We eat bread and we drink wine; but the great thing is what we are doing in our minds at the same time," says Richard Roberts, "There is no magic at this table. It means that our minds may do with Jesus, with the life that was in him, what our bodies do with bread and wine. That is assimilation. There is nothing out of the common in this. Two people who love one another as similate one another; they share each other's life. Friends as it were, penetrate and indwell each other. In fellowship, we absorb each other. So communion with Christ grows inuJ union with Christ. Communion in the mind with Jesus of Narazeth; communion in the soul with the everliving Christ. In the mind dwelling with Jesus in Galilee, in the spirit aspiring to the Christ at the right hand of God. Keeping com pany with Him and living among men accordingly." Army Announces CMTC Camps Will Not Be Held In 1941 Army officials announced this week that there will be no Citizens Military Training Camps held during 1941. An earlier announcement stal ed that applications were ' still being received for these camps, but the notice this week calls a halt to th. clan that has been in operation over a period of years. I rouins wno naa piannea on matting application for these camps are re quested by the Army not to do so. WHITESTON NEWS Miss Miriam Lane, of Norfolk, Va., was the week-end guest of her par ents, Mr. and Mrs. John T. Lane. Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Mercer Winslow were Floyd Wins low, Mrs. J. A. White, Mr. and Mrs. A. Q. White, of Norfolk, Va., Mr. and Mrs. Rupert Hall and son, A. Q., of Lewis, Delaware. Willard Baker, U. S. C. G., Nor folk, Va., visited his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Baker. Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Winslow and family, of Belvidere, visited Mr. and Mrs. Lucius Winslow and William T. Winslow (Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Archie White and daughter, Patricia, visited Mrs. White's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Allen S. Winslow, Sunday. FINDS "WHEEL FROM SKY" Coffeyville, Kan. An excited man telephoned the police and shouted that a "wheel had just dropped out of the sky." Officers investigated and found Henry Kellum, unhurt, staring at the remains of his .buzz saw. The flywheel had gone to pieces at full speed and a 25-pound chunk nad. embedded itself in a building, 830 feet away. MOST POPULAR BOOK Since the invention of printing, a total of 1,404,000,000 volumes of the Bible, in 1,039 different languages and dialects, have been published. ' The man w h o 1 organized the "blackout" system in England waa recently fined for carrying an uncov ered, flashlight during a London aw raid., , An optimist is a fellow who ex pects to get out of debt some day. One of the great trials of modern life is waiting for the car to be fixed. STRANGE STORY OF THE 4 . "SERPENT WOMAN" - Famous explorer tells how his curiosity led him to a girl in Trini dad who died of magic, believing sh had turned into a snake. Don't miss tills and other unusual- stories in the March 23r4 issue of- . The, American weekly tM bl magasine distributed with th- y v. K.enr V- i' v' Y , On Salo at AM Newsstands , i "J- AMERICAN COLONISTS 4epASl WL1EB eALelGH BROUGHT TOBACCO Bv The INDIANS. TO8AC- ffJlF'T Tto England his servani seeing him ,s now used aw the III 5M0KINe' BOUGHT him afiRE ... PEOPLE Of EVERY COUN Jfctiill'- sWV AN0 USED HIM WITH A my N THE WORLD. TOBACCO SOON BECAME IMPORTANT IN WORLD ECONOMY. 10DAV, THE LAR6EST PRODUCER IS THE u.S WITH AN ANNUAL CROP OF 1.167. 000,000 tea wu.son.nc is the worlds uasesi towcco market Who Knows? 1. How many nations are now in cluded in the Axis parnership? 2. What is the strength of the Turk army? 3. What trustee of the Warm Springs Foundation represents a foreign country in Washington? 4. What movie scars were recent ly honored for "best performance" in 1940? 5. Is San Francisco closer to Tokyo or Manila? 6. What present member of the Supreme Court resigned to run for the presidency? 7. Vvhat is an ichthyologist? 8. What is a "closed shop"? 9. Where is the "center of popu lation" in the United .States? 10. Has Germany any modem battleships? THE ANSWERS 1. Seven: Germany, Italy, Japan, Hungary, Ruraan.a, liulgaiia anil Slovakia. 2. About 800,000 soldiers. 3. Leighton G. McCarthy, Cana dian miii.ster to the United States. 4. James Stewart and Ginger Rogers. 5. Tokyo, 5,271 miles to 7,154 miles to Manila. b. Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes, who resigned as Associate Justice ir, 1916 to run against Presi dent Wilson. 7. An expert on fishes. 8. One in which only union work ers are employed. 9. Washington, Indiana. 10. Possibly as many as four, not counting two pocket-battleships. BIRTH ANNOUNCEMENT Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Rountree, of Hertford, Route 1, announce the b'rth of a son, Eugene, on March 5, 1941. Mother and baby are reported as doing nicely. Down And Up Appended to a monthly statement from a tailor: "Man is dust; dust settles, be a man." CENTNER HILL NEWS Mrs. Rufus Smithson and son are spending a few days at Fayette ville with Mr. Smithson. Elizabeth and Bernice Hollowell, of Sunburv. spent Saturday after noon with Peggy Ann Turner. Major Ward, U. S. Coast Guard, spent Tuesday and Wednesday with his mother, Mrs. A. L. Hobbs. Mrs. J. M. Turner, Miss Lillian Turner and Charlie Turner were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Wil ford Turner on Sunday. ' Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Wiggins ana children, of Ahoskie, visited her sis ter, Mrs. Cotter B. White, Sunday. Mrs. Tom Jordan called to see Mrs. W. E; .Byrum, Miss Mamie By rum and Mrs, Martha Monds Mon day afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Byrum, of near Cannons Ferry, visited Mr. and Mrs. Edward Byrum Saturday evening. " Miss Tommie Goodwin is visiting Mrs, Wilbur Privott -Mr. and Mn., Silas White are visiting their daughter, Mrs. Irvin Ward, and Mr.-; Ward, of near Wha leyville, Va. Rev. and Mrs. J. T. Stanford ano nephews, Bill Pickett and H. Tucket, spent Tuesday in Norfolk, Va. Miss, t'anictt Jernigan spent th week-em) in Newport News, Va., as the guest of friends. i i Mrs. J. S. Turner and daughter, Peggy, spent , Ahursday in Elizabeth CStjr. " ( ,n " ' , t Mrs. : Stanford- called, on Mrs. Ida' Reed Thursday morning. . -i( .' t -'Carey und' HanfordMcNidery -al Newport News, Va., spent the week I e Q33E533S)... ntOM 9MALI MIIMNIfMt IN COLONIAL MKRlCft.lOeACCO HAS BECOME MOT OMLV MMOS COOR BUT MAJOR iW OUSTRV S WELL THOUSANDS OF ACOXS ARE USEO INTO CUL TIVATION. ONE LARGE MANU FACTURE: (J Of CIGARETTES SPENDS $230,000 A OAV .. JUST FOR REVENUE STAMPS! TOB. t CO SEEDS ARE SO SMALL. A TABLE SP0ON fui wiLt PRODUCE Pt ANTS FOR. 6 OR 1 ACRES. MATbRAi FERTILIZERS HAVE BEEN FOUND MOST EFFECTIVE NOT ONLY FOR POODUClNO THE BEST SHE AND TEXTURE BUT ALSO FOR IMPARTING THE ciNESl tLAVOP TO THE LEAF end with their parents, Mr. and Mrs J. P. McNider. Miss Lucy Myers White spent the! week-end with her sister, Miss Eli zabeth White, who teaches in Gu: ford. James Cale, Miss Elaine Murden, Mr. and Mrs. Murden, of Newport News, Va., spent Sunday as guesio of Mrs. W. F. Cale and the Rev. Frank Cale. Mrs. J. G. White visited Mrs. Ai chie Lane Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Lane has been a patient in General Hospital, Norfolk, Va. Mrs. Oliver Jordan visited Mrs. J. P. Byrum and Mrs. Edward Byruiu MUfrg of Will LIQUID IABI rTS. SAIVF MOT cmp$ Puts 6 new No, you don't just imagine it That im proved performance is really there. Hun dreds of motorists around here who've tried it know Solvenized Pure-Pep in the tank puts more fun back in driving. Here's why: 1. Extra wolflht more pounds of power behind every piston stroke. 1. Extra boat units to keep that powa.r working all the time and stretch it into miles. To get rtd ) excess earben QUICKLY, ask about oarSohenued Tune-Up Treat memA Takes only 30 minutes . . . costs only $1 . . . money-back guarantee. WfiimslldDW nil Cinmpaimy Hertford, N. C. it M Friday evening. Mrs. J. G. White visited Mr. and Mrs. R. O. Furry Sunday morning. Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Chappel, of Belvidere, visited Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Lane Sunday. Mrs. J. S. Turner and Mr. ana Mrs. J. P. Byrum visited in the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Byrum Sun day evening. Mr. and Mrs. Wilford Turner, Mrs. J. M. Turner, Miss Lillian Turnei and Charlie Turner called on Mr. and Mrs. J. "S. Turner Sunday afternoon. Mr. arid Mrs. Willie Byrum and daughter, Shirley, visited her par ents, Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Hollowei Sunday. ROr. Farmer . It takes a neighbor to help a neigh bor. You can't expect somebody hun dreds of miles away to understand your problems and the conditions un der which you have to farm. This holds good in buying fertiliz ers. Naturally, you'd expect a fertil izer made right in your own farming region, by neighbors who know youi soil and crops needs, to be the best for you. And you're right. SCO-CO Fertilizer is made in this section, especially to meet your farm ing requirements. No wonder it pro duces such remarkable results wher ever it is used. THE SOUTHERN COTTON OIL COMPANY HERTFORD, N. C. A NEIGHBORLY INSTITUTION S THE NEW REG. US. JT M PAT- off- 3. Extra anti-knock value not just at high speeds . . . not just at low speeds . . . but all around the dial. And that's not all! Even more important than any other new feature is Pure Oil's chemical bonus something no other gasoline in this territory can offer: Extra chemical combina tion that works as you drive to reduce excess carbon formation in your motor. Exdusire at Pure Oil dealers. Still costs no more than regular. Drive in at the blue-and-white Pure Oil sign. Lemon Juice Recipe Checks Rheumatic Pain Quickly If you suffer from rheumatic, arthri- tis or neuritis . inexpensive home are using. Get Compound today. pam, try this simple recipe that thousands a package of Ru-Ei Mix it with a quart of water, add the juice of 4 lemons. It's edsy. Pleasant and no trouble at all. You need only 2 table spoonfuls two times a day. Often within 48 hours sometimes over night splendid results are obtained. If the pains do not quickly leave and if you do not feel better, Ru-Ex will cost you nothing to try as it is sold by your druggist under an abso lute money-back guarantee. Ru-Ex Compound is (or sale and recommended by Roberson's Drug: Store I 4 JviV
The Perquimans Weekly (Hertford, N.C.)
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March 14, 1941, edition 1
7
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